W. C. Beaty & Co. v. Southern Ry

61 S.E. 1006 | S.C. | 1908

July 13, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This action was commenced on the 28th day of March, 1907, in a magistrate's court for Fairfield county, S.C. by the service of summons and complaint upon the defendant.

In their complaint, the plaintiffs allege that the defendant is justly indebted to them in the sum of $48.10., with interest thereon from the 17th day of October, 1906, for the value of a part of a shipment of flour from Statesville, N.C., which was lost in transit, together with $50 as statutory penalty for the non-payment of a claim within the statutory period, filed with defendant's agent for said sum of $48.10, at the point of destination.

The answer of the defendant was a general denial of the allegations of the complaint. *529

The magistrate, after hearing testimony, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $98.10.

The defendant thereupon appealed to the Court of Common Pleas for Fairfield county upon various exceptions, all of which were abandoned at the trial except the following:

1. "That the magistrate erred in allowing the plaintiff, C. A. Stevenson, to testify as to the contents of a written instrument, to wit: the claim filed by him, when such testimony was not the best evidence of said written instrument, and when it appears that plaintiff had in his possession a copy thereof, such testimony being duly objected to."

The case came on before Judge John S. Wilson, at the September, 1907, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Fairfield county, on appeal from the judgment of the magistrate. Judge Wilson issued an order affirming the decision of the magistrate and dismissing the appeal.

From this order of Judge John S. Wilson, the defendant has appealed to this Court upon two exceptions:

1. "Because his Honor erred in overruling the first exception of the defendant to the judgment of the magistrate, which was as follows: `That the magistrate erred in allowing the plaintiff, C.A. Stevenson, to testify as to the contents of a written instrument, to wit: the claim filed by him, when such testimony was not the best evidence of said written instrument, and when it appeared that plaintiff had in his possession a copy thereof, such testimony being duly objected to.' The error being that said exception was well taken, and its was error in the Circuit Judge to hold that oral testimony, could be given of the contents of a written instrument, when it appeared that a copy thereof was in existence and could have been produced.

2. "Because his Honor erred in not sustaining said exception of the defendant to the judgment of the magistrate, and erred in not holding that it was incompetent to give oral testimony as to a written instrument, when it appeared that a copy of said written instrument was in existence, and could *530 have been produced, such oral testimony not being the best evidence of the contents of said written instrument, and the copy being better and higher evidence than oral testimony as to the contents of said written instrument."

A notice in writing was served upon the Southern Railway Company to produce the original claim for damages in the above stated case and the letter accompanying same, both dated October 17, 1906, and field with the agent of the defendant at Winnsboro, S.C. signed by the plaintiff, W.C. Beaty Co., with an additional notice that if the defendant failed to produce said claim and letters the plaintiff would offer secondary evidence of the contends thereof. The defendant had in its possession this original claim for damages and the letter accompanying same. It does not deny the fact of possession nor its ability to furnish said original claim for damages and the letter accompanying it, but it only sets up that it has not those letters in Court; there was no reason given therefore by the defendant for its failure to answer the demand made upon it for these papers. Those papers were necessary to plaintiff's case in Court, which facts the defendants well knew.

Under the law of this State and in accordance with the general rule, that where the writing containing or constituting the primary evidence of the fact to be proved is satisfactorily shown to have been lost or destroyed, without the fault of the party desiring to prove the fact, secondary evidence becomes admissible. 17 Cyc., 518; Hunter v. Hunter,63 S.C. 78, 41 S.E., 33; Perry v. Jeffries, 61 S.C. 292,39 S.E., 515; Cook v. Wood, 1 McCord, 139. It is not denied by the defendants that the plaintiff is entitled to show the contents of the original claim for damages as well as the letter accompanying the said claim. It only insists that secondary evidence of the contents should consist of a copy of said papers which the plaintiff, while being examined as a witness, admitted that he had in his place of business. No demand was made by a notice in writing for these copies. It was only when the witness was on the stand that the *531 demand was made upon him. There is no rule of law in this State by which a plaintiff or other party is restricted in offering secondary evidence of the contents of lost or mislaid papers to copies of such papers. All that is required under our law is that the testimony offered shall show the contents of such lost papers. There are no degrees of proof in case of the loss of an instrument; all that is required is that the party must furnish proof of the contents of such lost document.

It is useless to multiply words on this subject; the rule we have stated is that which obtains in this State and is a response to the demands of the appellant. We must, therefore, overrule these exceptions.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.